Certainly Seef Bier is an original beer. It includes four grains; it looks like wheatbeer, but it has 6.5% alcohol. It has a personality and is different.

L: wheatbeer-alike; trouble; top is erasing too quickly;
S: top of the bill; smells like Tripel Karmeliet because of the haver? Fresh yeasty smell; citrus; stone; spices.
T: after such a smell, the taste is a bit thin; ofcourse I could smell this one the whole evening, but it has to be consumed too! It has some orange, it's round, with a citrus end.
M: nice follow up of smell, taste and mouthfeel; but (okay, that's personal) I would prefer a little more bite.
O: overall this is a very good, original beer; maybe its greatness is -above all- in the drinkability (which I have to explore another time; I only bought one bottle!). (795 characters)

Draft at Owen & Engine, served in it's own branded tumbler pint.Quick review from written notes.

Hazy orange body, thin skim across the surface, and minimal lacing in the glass.

Earthy Belgian yeast aroma, vague wheat, hints of lemon Pledge.

Astringent feel with an odd taste. Overly spiced with overpowering notes of cleaning products (lemon scent Pledge again). Grains and sterile gauze. Light to medium body, with adequate carbonation, but the odd flavors throw it out of balance with little nuance. Not sure what's going on with this, it's just plain strange and definitely not enjoyable. Even stranger is that the beer is (supposedly) not actually spiced, and uses a "mutated baker's yeast" strain.

The revival campaign of this beer is admirable, considering the history and research behind it, but the taste was pretty dismal. Might try a bottle just to be sure it wasn't a draft line issue. (906 characters)

Poured into a stone flute. Pours a medium golden amber with a half finger white head that dissipates to a thin film and light lacing. Nice aroma of bready malt, coriander, toffee, light apple and peach juice, mildly floral. Flavor is bready malt, strong coriander, light apple and pear juice, hint of lemon, mixed floral; finishes moderately dry with coriander bitterness. Medium bodied with peppery carbonation. A unique take on the Belgian pale ale style. The flavor profile is much closer to a triple, but with less intensity and lighter flavors. The coriander is quite dominant, as in a tripel and adds a different bitterness to the finish. Moderately dry throughout, particularly in the finish. I was taken by surprise at the first sip, but enjoyed this more as I got familiar with the spicing. Interesting and different. (826 characters)